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Thursday, September 15, 2011 | return to: news & features, local


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Sides divided after children’s museum in Oakland cancels art show by Gaza kids

by dan pine, staff writer

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With the Museum of Children’s Art in Oakland abruptly canceling an exhibit of drawings by Palestinian children last week, pro-Israel advocates in the Jewish community are cheering. Sponsors of the exhibit are booing.

The downtown museum had planned to open “A Child’s View of Gaza” on Sept. 24. The exhibit was to have featured children’s drawings — many of them depicting blood and violence — of their reactions to Israel’s 2008-2009 Gaza incursion.

A concerted lobbying effort by the Jewish Community Relations Council, the Jewish Federation of the East Bay and the Anti-Defamation League persuaded the MOCHA board on Sept. 8 to cancel the show.

While applauding the museum’s decision, JCRC Executive Director Rabbi Doug Kahn criticized the exhibit for promoting an anti-Israel political agenda and providing no context on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Two drawings that were going to be shown in the exhibit “A Child’s View of Gaza” in Oakland   images/courtesy of middle east children’s alliance
Two drawings that were going to be shown in the exhibit “A Child’s View of Gaza” in Oakland images/courtesy of middle east children’s alliance
“The exhibit would have brought tremendous polarization and division directly into the museum,” he said. “The content of the exhibit was extreme. It would have been outrageous that very young children would potentially view drawings depicting violence.”

Officials of the museum, a brightly colored facility that features on-site children’s learning programs, agreed. In a statement, MOCHA board chair Hilmon Sorey said, “It became clear that this exhibit was not appropriate for an open gallery accessible by all children.”

Sponsored by the Berkeley-based Middle East Children’s Alliance and several other pro-Palestinian organizations, the exhibit had been displayed before at an art museum in Maine.

Among the drawings are images of Israeli bombs and tanks striking a mosque; a bomb labeled with the U.S. and Israeli flags landing in a bloody square with a dismembered body nearby; an Israeli soldier with a Star of David on his chest, threatening a mother and child with an assault rifle; and people on fire and bloody corpses in the street.

Not exactly Sesame Street.

“The violent images portrayed in the drawings were not appropriate for children,” said Rabbi James Brandt, CEO of the East Bay federation. “Because all of the perpetrators of the violence in the drawings were labeled with Jewish stars and Israeli flags, children who visit the museum would make a direct association between the drawings and their Jewish friends and classmates.”

MECA Executive Director Barbara Lubin approached the museum six months ago to propose the exhibit. She told j. this week that museum executives “were very excited” about the project at the time.

Lubin anticipated resistance, and warned MOCHA staff and board members. “We told them there could be some pressure from outside groups, but they didn’t seem concerned,” she recalled. “Then we were told [Sept. 8] that there had been some pressure put on their people and funders.”

Lubin dismissed the concerns of the JCRC, including the appropriateness of showing violent images to young children. She also noted that MOCHA displayed previous exhibits of art by children from war zones, such as Iraq and World War II Europe.

The 2004 Iraqi exhibit at MOCHA included drawings depicting U.S. attack helicopters in the act of firing. The museum’s 2007 Holocaust exhibit consisted of art drawn more than 60 years ago by Bay Area children reacting to the war headlines of the day.

“In terms of this not being appropriate for kids, it’s just as appropriate as the Iraqi exhibit,” Lubin stressed, adding that MECA was going to have counselors on hand to assist young patrons with any questions, concerns or distresses they might have had.

Lubin conceded the exhibit would have helped push MECA’s cause, noting, “It is to let the voices of children who live in the Gaza Strip and [who] lived through some of the most awful experiences have a voice. That’s the agenda.”

Brandt, who has an arts background and at one time taught art to children, questioned whether the pictures were created without adult intervention.

“I can’t definitely say whether these pictures were drawn by children,” he said, “but I find it challenging to believe that these children were not specifically directed and coaxed. [Israeli] soldiers do not wear Jewish stars, and the ambulances in Gaza do not say ‘Ambulance’ in English.”

Lubin said she has appealed to the MOCHA board to reverse its decision.

The JCRC, meanwhile, is urging people to email the museum and Sorey to express their appreciation of their decision to cancel the exhibit.

Unless the cancellation is reversed, Lubin said she and MECA supporters will gather in front of the museum on Sept. 24, the exhibit’s previously scheduled opening day, and display the drawings.

On the MECA website, Lubin decried the cancellation as a blow against freedom of speech.

Kahn disputed that logic.

“What people should be outraged by is the notion that an organization would try to use the good name of the museum and take advantage of its openness and good will,” Kahn said. “The decision to cancel the exhibit has nothing to do with free speech. This has to do with age-appropriateness and creating a safe environment for all children, including Jewish children.”


Comments

Posted by Cadance M
09/15/2011  at  08:09 PM
More anti Semitism?

 MECA had planned to have Khalil Bendib, a cartoonist with a history of using classic anti-Semitic imagery  to entertain and educate children at the MOCHA exhibit. And  (is anyone surprised? ) Jewish Voice for Peace, ignoring the overt anti-Semitism and Jew baiting of this exhibit, has signed on as a co-sponsor.
Would you want this man working with your children?     
http://bendibexposed.wordpress.com/2011/09/12/12/

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Posted by ssholin
09/15/2011  at  08:34 PM
Well said Cadance M. For

Well said Cadance M. For me, the main reason to oppose showing these pictures was mentioned in this article, “I can’t definitely say whether these pictures were drawn by children,” he said, “but I find it challenging to believe that these children were not specifically directed and coaxed. [Israeli] soldiers do not wear Jewish stars, and the ambulances in Gaza do not say ‘Ambulance’ in English.” Anyone who thinks this was not a political agenda by adults is deluding themselves.

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Posted by Michael Harris
09/15/2011  at  11:27 PM
It can't be anti-Semitic if JVP approves....

after all, JVP claims that it opposes anti-Semitism. So since they were fine with this cartoonist, his work must not be anti-Semitic, right?

JVP continues to complain that they are not welcome in the Jewish community’s institutions.  They can be—all they have to do is utter the same words that PM Netanyahu wants to hear from Mahmoud Abbas:  “I accept the Jewish state.” (btw, that also means no ads promoting the fictional “right” of return).

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Posted by joolz
09/16/2011  at  10:01 PM
Having spent substantial time in

Having spent substantial time in the West Bank and Gaza I can say this to the Rabbi who questions whether children could have produced the images.
1) Palestinian ambulances DO say “ambulance in english
2) Israeli tanks, military bulldozers and other vehicles have stars of david on the sides, as well as often flags waving .
The pictures are obviously no photo realistic images (what children’s art is?) but they certainly would not need coaching to come up with these kind of imagery.
I have personally witnessed children being shot at from tanks flying the israeli flag.

Whether Rabbit Brandt wants these pictures seen is another question, but there is no doubt that the children would be well capable of having come up with them

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Posted by Cadance M
09/17/2011  at  09:08 AM
The exhibit has a new home

The first Presbyterian church of Oakland on broadway has welcomed this exhibit.  Rev. Jack shriver is active in Sabeel, and has also hosted the notorious Hajo Meyer ” never again” tour in the past. 
In spite of the new location, Barbara Lubin of MECA has called for a protest of the Childrens museum, on Sept. 24.  Her concern for children clearly does not extend to the children of Oakland, and she is willing to continue these attacks on our civic institutions, to promote her political agenda.

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Posted by sol rosenberg
09/17/2011  at  10:39 PM
Human sheilds and bogus drawings

it’s all par for the course when it comes to palestinian anti-Israel propaganda. terror supporting leftists in the bay area should know that from now on they will not be able to operate in public with impunity and further. if you think that’s just an idle boast then ask JVP and Sabeel what happened to their pro-palestinian contingent of the solano stroll parade last week on the 10th anniversary of 911.

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Posted by Cadance M
09/19/2011  at  11:49 AM
MECA is protesting the Childrens Museum this weekend

Barbara Lubin and MECA are calling for a weekend of protest against the Museum of Childrens art in Oakland.  The first protest is scheduled for this Friday at 3- the second for Saturday 1- 3 (its billed as a “family friendly protest”.  Does that mean the offending pictures will not be shown?) 

I suggest that those who love and support Mocha, show up both days, and thank them, with all our hearts, and with our checkbooks for standing firm against hate.

And imagine what kind of heartless individual organizes a protest of a childrens art museum.

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Posted by Parity
09/21/2011  at  08:59 PM
All this concern about children's

All this concern about children’s psyches doesn’t seem have factored into the decision to go to war. Most people in Gaza are children under the age of 15. As a commentator said before the war, when faced with that kind of demographic, you shouldn’t go to war at all.

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Posted by Theresa
10/04/2011  at  11:49 AM
JVP endorses protest of art from Jerusalem

It continues to amaze me that organizations like JVP routinely stand with those that would have Israel destroyed, and work to silence any voices they oppose.  The hypocrisy is astonishing.

JVP and friends are now endorsing a protest of the Jerusalem string quartet.  Clearly their commitment to art and free expression is as deep as their commitment to their Judiasm.

Their call to action follows:

PROTEST The Jerusalem String Quartet
CALLING FOR THE BOYCOTT OF THE JERUSALEM STRING QUARTET
Tuesday, October 4, 2011, 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
Segerstrom Center for the Arts, Costa Mesa
Meet at the intersection of Anton Blvd. and Avenue of the Arts
The Jerusalem String Quartet Fiddles While Palestine Burns
Support the CALL of Palestinian Civil Society, Israelis of Conscience and the worldwide Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement. Blah balh blah…Using culture and art to present the “civilized” face of Israel, the Jerusalem String Quartet serves as a tool of the Israel-promotion campaign….blah blah blah….Initial endorsers: Al-Awda, LA; ANSWER,LA; ARA-LA/People Against Racist Terror; BDS–LA Justice for Palestinians; CEIA-SC (Campaign to End Israeli Apartheid); US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation; Friends of Sabeel–OC, LA; IDC (Israel Divestment Campaign); Jewish Voice for Peace – LA; Orange County Peace & Freedom Party; Progressive Iranians of Southern California; US Academic and Cultural Boycott Campaign; WIB-LA (Women in Black-Los Angeles)

What organization protests classical music from States they despise, while whining about free expression and tolerance?  Jewish Voice for Peace and their partners in crime from Al awda, Answer and other racist groups.

There is a very good reason JVP is so universally despised by the mainstream Jewish community

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Posted by Max Weiss
10/11/2011  at  07:25 PM
MECA: Some charity

According to the Better Business Bureau, the Middle east Childrens Alliance fails to meet their standards for Charity accountability

http://www.bbb.org/charity-reviews/national/children-and-youth/middle-east-childrens-alliance-in-berkeley-ca-21129

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